The distribution of (TTAGGG)n telomeric repeats was studied in chromosomes of two Atlantic eels, Anguilla anguilla and A. rostrata. We found that these sequences hybridize to all the telomeres but also to the entire nucleolar organizer region (NOR) localized in both species at the short arm of chromosome 8. This was considered to be due to the interspersion of telomeric sequences within the NOR ones. Whatever the significance of this interspersion may be, it seems to be limited to A. anguilla and A. rostrata since in Muraena helena (family muraenidae), which also belongs to the Anguilliformes, no telomeric hybridization signals were found along the NOR regions.
Early and late replication bandings have been obtained by in vitro BrdU incorporation in the Mediterranean Muraenidae species Muraena helena and Gymnothorax unicolor, and used to characterize their karyotypes. A comparative analysis of the banding patterns allowed to point out high karyotype similarity as well as chromosome rearrangements that occurred in karyotype evolution between these species.
Eighteen microsatellite loci were isolated and characterized from the blue and red shrimp, Aristeus antennatus Risso 1816, a commercially exploited marine crustacean widely distributed throughout the Mediterranean Sea and in the eastern Atlantic. Polymorphism was assessed in a population (n = 20) from the southwestern Sardinian seas; 14 loci resulted polymorphic and showed from three to 13 alleles. The observed heterozygosity ranged from 0.2 to 0.85. These microsatellites will be potentially useful for the study of A. antennatus population genetic structure.
To investigate the genome of the anguilliform fish Muraena helena at the molecular level we characterized total DNA by agarose gel electrophoresis after cleavage with AluI, HaeIII, MboI, and DdeI restriction endonucleases. Subsequently, we isolated the DNA from two specific electrophoretic fractions to be used as probes for Southern and in situ hybridization experiments. One such fraction showed an electrophoretic pattern typical of highly repetitive DNA localized in the centromeres of many chromosomes. The other fraction was shown to be located in the nucleolar organizer region, partially coincident with 45S rDNA, and to be composed of highly repetitive sequences.
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